Valgejõe
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Valgejõe is a village in
Kuusalu Parish Kuusalu Parish ( et, Kuusalu vald) is a rural municipality in northern Estonia, the largest in Harju County. After joining with the adjacent Loksa Parish in 2005, the municipality has now a population of 6,863 (as of 1 January 2009) and covers an ...
,
Harju County Harju County ( et, Harju maakond or ''Harjumaa''), is one of the fifteen counties of Estonia. It is situated in Northern Estonia, on the southern coast of the Gulf of Finland, and borders Lääne-Viru County to the east, Järva County to the sou ...
, in northern
Estonia Estonia, formally the Republic of Estonia, is a country by the Baltic Sea in Northern Europe. It is bordered to the north by the Gulf of Finland across from Finland, to the west by the sea across from Sweden, to the south by Latvia, a ...
. It is located on the crossing of the
Tallinn Tallinn () is the most populous and capital city of Estonia. Situated on a bay in north Estonia, on the shore of the Gulf of Finland of the Baltic Sea, Tallinn has a population of 437,811 (as of 2022) and administratively lies in the Harju ' ...
Narva Narva, russian: Нарва is a municipality and city in Estonia. It is located in Ida-Viru County, Ida-Viru county, at the Extreme points of Estonia, eastern extreme point of Estonia, on the west bank of the Narva (river), Narva river which ...
road (part of the E20) and the
Valgejõgi Valgejõgi (lit. ''White River'') is a river in Northern Estonia. Its source is in Lake Porkuni in Pandivere (Lääne-Viru County) and it drains into Hara Bay (part of Finnish Gulf) at Loksa (Harju County). Geography Valgejõgi lacks any major ...
River. Valgejõe (''white river'') dates from the 13th century, located initially in today's Vanaküla (''old village''). In the early 17th century the centre of the village shifted some kilometers south to the area of Tallinn-Narva road river crossing and the tavern. In north from Vanaküla split Parksi and Nõmmeveski. Situated on the historic division line of Harju and Viru counties the local administrative borders have constantly changed here. Since the 1939 reform however, when the county border skipped a few kilometers eastward, Valgejõe, Vanaküla and Parksi lands were moved between multiple different administrative units, but always together. That has laid basis for emergence of historic triple village.


Beginning of the village

On 20 September 1290, Danish King Erik Menved expanded the lands of cistercians from Gotland around the Kolga sub-monastery, listing among other villages Witena/Valgejõe. The commemoration stone to first written notion of the village was opened here in 1992, carved by Andres Allmägi from Parksi.


Tavern and forestry

On 9 December 1585, right after the sudden death of
Pontus De la Gardie Baron Pontus De la Gardie (c. 1520 – 5 November 1585) was a French nobleman and a general in the service of Denmark and Sweden. Life and career He was born Ponce d'Escouperie in Caunes-Minervois (Aude), Languedoc, a son of Jacques Esc ...
, his cousin, Captain Johan De la Blanque, ordered the revisory of Kolga manor, which also included the rewrite of the rental agreement of Witenå tavern. The date of the tavern's first mentioning is celebrated also as the birthday of Veinivilla winery, which settled here in 2014. Last tavern-keeper Jaaska Viikmann closed the business near the end of the 19th century. From the beginning of the 20th century the house was used by Kolga majorate manor's (fidei-comiss) forest managers and later by Valgejõe forestry.


Great Northern War

In the Battle of Läsna-Valgejõe on 16 June 1704, 5000 Russian cavalry and 1000 infantry under the colonel Karl Evald von Rönne forced to flee from fortified positions 1400 Swedish cavalry under command of major-general Anton von Schlippenbach. On the Russian side 100 were killed, on the Swedish side 60 men. About 50 Swedish cavalrymen were imprisoned, including Oberst Fritz Wachtmeister. According to popular memory Russians were buried to Russian hill, a few hundred meters from here towards Tallinn.


War of Independence

The Battle of Valgejõe took place 22–24 December 1918. Retreating were 4th and 5th regiments of the Estonian Popular Army and on offensive Revel's (Tallinn) Communist Rifle Regiment (mostly red Estonians and Finns), supported by seamen's squad. In the Popular Army 234 men were engaged, 2 killed. On red's side 1 was injured. A commemorating stone to the battle site was placed here on its 100th anniversary.


Bridge and border

The road from Tallinn to Narva through Valgejõe dates at least since the late 17th century. According to popular memory already since the Swedish period here was also the 5-arched bridge, but the first documented evidence of the bridge comes only fro
1784 delineanation map
of ancient counties Harjumaa and Virumaa. Next to the old limestone bridge was built a new crossing using concrete in 1914, but this was blown up by retreating German troops in September 1944. After several temporary wooden constructions the concrete bridge was rebuilt only in 1957. A new highway built for Tallinn Olympic regatta redirected since 1981 most of the traffic away from the heart of village.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Valgejoe Villages in Harju County